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that State for Governor and other officers will be vastly important, and "the struggle will be marked with extreme violence. It adds: The Democrats have united their discordant elements upon a conservative basis, and have selected as candidate for Governor, Oration Seymour.--The Republicans have not yet made their nomination, or announced the principles on which the campaign is to be conducted on their part. But it is understood that the conservative element in the party — including Mr. Seward and Thurlow Weed — has been detected and crushed, and that the radicals will the roost. Their journals in this city are coming out in very remarkable articles, shaping the issue, and laboring hard to bring the whole party over to their sanitary and revolutionary views. The Tribune of yesterday, for example, presents the bloody programme of extermination of the white race of the South, as did Thaddeus Stevens, a short time ago, in the House of Representatives. The organ of the Jacobi
The Daily Dispatch: September 25, 1862., [Electronic resource], The English press on American Affairs — a Blast against Seward's emigration circular. (search)
The English press on American Affairs — a Blast against Seward's emigration circular. [From the London Herald, Sept. 2] Mr. Seward's motive in addressing the emigration circular of the 8th of August to the diplomatic and consular agents of the Mr. Seward's motive in addressing the emigration circular of the 8th of August to the diplomatic and consular agents of the United States is apparent. He desires to deceive Europe on the subject of the condition of the residuum of the Republic over which he and Mr. Lincoln, in the fullness of time, have been called to rule. Europe is, if possible, to be convinced that tproclaim to the world that this is the time for the distressed to emigrate. Nowhere else, let them say in the words of Mr. Seward, can the industrious laboring man and artisan expect so liberal a recompense for his services as in the United States, oon be reached. Every emigrant drawn from these shores, and from the shores of Continental Europe, by the falsehood of Mr. Seward and the representations of diplomatic and consular agents of the United States, would be cruelly, infamously, and crimi